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22 votes
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How watermelon's reputation got tangled in racism
12 votes -
Are today’s young readers turning on The Catcher in the Rye?
9 votes -
Queer people of color reflect on being told to “go back”
8 votes -
"Cymru am byth!" – How speaking Welsh became cool
12 votes -
How apartheid killed Johannesburg's cycling culture
11 votes -
What are good, modern right-wing values anyways?
I'm in too much of a left-wing echo chamber, to the point where anything conservative or right wing appears to be 'evil' or not necessarily purely right-wing. For example, conservatives generally...
I'm in too much of a left-wing echo chamber, to the point where anything conservative or right wing appears to be 'evil' or not necessarily purely right-wing. For example, conservatives generally promote family values and the family as the foundational unit of a society. But this too often gets grouped together with same/opposite sex marriage arguments. Another point is small government, but that often manifests in deregulation in areas where regulation is now necessary (e.g. environment).
So, what does it mean to be an ethical right-winger today and in the next decade?
40 votes -
'If not I, then who?’: Armed with the internet, Russia’s young people want to remake their world
10 votes -
In what ways is the world better now than it was ten years ago?
I could use some optimism and positive reframing right now, and I'm sure I'm not the only one. As such, I want to know about some good things! Progress and such! In my question, I asked about "the...
I could use some optimism and positive reframing right now, and I'm sure I'm not the only one. As such, I want to know about some good things! Progress and such!
In my question, I asked about "the world" but I am really interested in any example, no matter how global or local. It also doesn't have to be explicitly human-focused, so feel free to gush about the improvements in, say, a programming language you love, or the tabletop gaming ruleset you use. I'm interested in positive examples of all types.
20 votes -
Community can offer a cure to our technology addictions
5 votes -
The American Dream is killing us
14 votes -
In Alaska, climate change is showing increasing signs of disrupting everyday life
12 votes -
South Korean women 'escape the corset' and reject their country's beauty ideals
11 votes -
The loneliness epidemic
15 votes -
Women suffer needless pain because almost everything is designed for men
18 votes -
Moral circle expansion: How humanity’s idea of who deserves moral concern has grown — and will keep growing
9 votes -
The Baraboo Nazi prom photo shocked the world. The city’s response shocked its residents.
14 votes -
Do you think a collapse is coming?
Can be any kind, social, political, environmental, economic etc etc. I'm thinking more on a worldwide scale rather than just one local area, the topic's been on my mind recently.
29 votes -
Excommunicate me from the church of social justice
18 votes -
This is what the life of an incel looks like
32 votes -
"Deep Adaptation": A paper that predicts an inevitable near-term social collapse due to climate change
26 votes -
Kipple field notes
3 votes -
How debt kills
9 votes -
There’s a vanishing resource we’re not talking about - humans are losing our cultural diversity even faster than we’re destroying the planet
27 votes -
Black mecca or most unequal US city: Will the real Atlanta please stand up?
7 votes -
How do you define your masculinity/femininity?
In lieu of the recent Gillette ad, and seeing as the conversation around it has stirred the pot quite a bit, I wanted to propose a conversation where we start from the very beginning: Without yet...
In lieu of the recent Gillette ad, and seeing as the conversation around it has stirred the pot quite a bit, I wanted to propose a conversation where we start from the very beginning:
Without yet talking about subsets, variants, or interpretations of masculinity/femininity (toxic or otherwise). How do you define it for yourself: what makes you masculine or feminine, or what parts of you would you describe as such, do you feel that those things go as universal descriptors or are they specific to your case?
There may also be some deeper questions in here about where you think you gained this conception (your family? your immediate circle of contacts? Role models?) or who you think best embodies your ideal definition of your gender.
23 votes -
Who owns the internet? (What Big Tech’s monopoly powers mean for our culture.)
11 votes -
I was a cable guy. I saw the worst of America
42 votes -
Third-wave anti-racism makes sense, but it’s a dead end
11 votes -
Who is an "expert"?
8 votes -
'This cuts across society': How singeli music went from Tanzania to the world
5 votes -
A week in Xinjiang's absolute surveillance state
14 votes -
What these two French words can teach us about social change
3 votes -
We thought the Incas couldn’t write. These knots change everything.
8 votes -
Exiled: The disturbing story of a citizen made unBritish
7 votes -
A generation in Japan faces a lonely death
19 votes -
Bonfire of the humanities: The role of history in a society afflicted by short-termism
13 votes -
If human population stops rising or decreases, what will be the negative effects for people?
From the environmental standpoint shrinking of human population is often quoted to have desirable effects, and that's reasonable. But from the point of view of our daily lives and functioning of...
From the environmental standpoint shrinking of human population is often quoted to have desirable effects, and that's reasonable. But from the point of view of our daily lives and functioning of the human society, what negatives could we then expect? (I mean a soft decline due to lower birth rates, not some abrupt events.)
For example, with smaller population fewer music albums could be made every year than some time before, and people would maybe feel less inspired and satisfied. Less scientific research, less choices for relationships... and maybe other things? Would being more technically advanced compensate for the issues? Won't we feel ourselves in oblivion and romanticize the "numerous" past?
15 votes -
The island that never stops apologising
7 votes -
What does the online / social media world look like to you, what would you want?
Some of you may have heard that Google+ will be shutting down in August, 2019. Though much criticised (including by me), the site offered some compelling dynamics, and I've reflected a lot on...
Some of you may have heard that Google+ will be shutting down in August, 2019. Though much criticised (including by me), the site offered some compelling dynamics, and I've reflected a lot on those.
I'm involved in the effort to find new homes for Plussers and Communities, which has become something of an excuse to explore and redefine what "online" and "social" media are ("PlexodusWiki").
Part of this involves some frankly embarrassing attempts to try to define what social media is, and what its properties are (both topics reflected heavily in the recent-changes section of the wiki above).
Tildes is ... among the potential target sites (there are a few Plussers, some of whom I really appreciated knowing and hearing from there), here, though the site dynamics make discovering and following them hard. This site is evolving its own culture and dynamics, parts of which I'm becoming aware of.
I've been online for well over 30 years, and discovered my first online communities via Unix talk, email, FTP, and Usenet, as well as (no kidding) a computerised university library catalogue system. Unsurprisingly: if you provide a way, especially for bright and precocious minds to interact with one another, they will. I've watched several evolutions of Internet and Web, now increasing App-based platforms. There are differences, but also similarities and patterns emerging. Lessons from previous eras of television, radio, telephony, telegraphy, print, writing, oral traditions, and more, can be applied.
I've got far more questions than answers and thought I'd put a few out here:
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What does online or social media mean to you? Is it all user-generated content platforms? Web only? Apps? Email or chat? Wikis? GitHub, GitLab, and StackExchange?
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Is social networking as exemplified by Facebook or Twitter net good or bad? Why? If bad, how might you fix it? Or is it time to simply retreat?
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What properties or characteristics would you use to specify, define, or distinguish social or online media?
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What emergent properties -- site dynamics, if you will -- are positive or negative? What are those based on?
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What are the positive and negative aspects of scale?
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What risks would you consider in self-hosting either your own or a group's online presence?
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What is/was the best online community experience you've had? What characterised it? How did it form? How did it fail (if it did)?
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What elements would comprise your ideal online experience?
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What would you nuke from orbit, after takeoff, just to be sure?
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Are you or your group seeking new options or platforms? What process / considerations do you have?
I could keep going and will regret not adding other questions, but this is a good start. Feel free to suggest other dimensions, though some focus on what I've prompted with would be appreciated.
19 votes -
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The oldest true stories in the world
6 votes -
The bad behavior of the richest: what I learned from wealth managers
16 votes -
The people who moved to Chernobyl
8 votes -
The politicisation of English language proficiency, not poor English itself, creates barriers.
7 votes -
Suicide and mental health
8 votes -
Scott Morrison calls for new national day to recognise Indigenous people
8 votes -
Americans want to believe jobs are the solution to poverty. They’re not.
36 votes -
Americans want to believe jobs are the solution to poverty. They’re not.
12 votes -
White girls in cars drinking coffee
I've been sick the last couple of days; cooped up in my dark basement apartment. I've been dying to get outside, but it's misting and cloudy, so I went to Starbucks drive thru and drove to a...
I've been sick the last couple of days; cooped up in my dark basement apartment. I've been dying to get outside, but it's misting and cloudy, so I went to Starbucks drive thru and drove to a nearby park to sit and read. I opened all the windows and reclined my seat in the park's deserted parking lot. After a few minutes, a police car came up the driveway, pulled into the parking lot kinda fast and drove up to my car. I got ready to talk to him, but he averted course, drove around my car in a circle, glanced at my face (pleasant smile) and drove off again.
The whole situation left me feeling a little pensive. I'm a young-ish white woman in a ten-ish year old car, drinking tea and reading a book (though i doubt he got close enough to see that part) in a parking lot of a deserted park on a rainy day. How could the story have changed if I was a darker color and/or/and a different gender? Would that cop have still driven off? Possibly. Hopefully. Or would he have inconvenienced me? Questioned me, demeaned me, dehumanized me? Would he have given me the benefit of the doubt? If i got scared because of a lifetime of tense police encounters, would he have hurt me, tazed me, shot me?
I get the basics of managing risk. But having dark skin does not predispose us to be risky. Systemic oppression, un/official smear campaigns, mistrust, xenophobia, unequal opportunity, gerrymandering, propaganda have taught us that white girls in cars drinking coffee in a parking lot on a rainy evening are less risky than a black man in his home or his neighborhood or in his car drinking coffee in a parking lot on a rainy evening. And it hurts us all.
I haven't posted in a while, and I want to do my part; also, I wanted to tell this story, but not on Facebook. Thanks.
33 votes -
Meet the table busser who’s worked at the same pancake house for fifty-four years and still makes minimum wage
14 votes